The Texas Municipal League advocates for city governments – the league calls the governor’s priorities an all-out assault. Why?

City leaders are saying the state is increasingly meddling in matters that should be left up to local leaders and that in recent years state lawmakers are passing laws that increasingly regulate cities and counties – everything from property taxes, ride-hailing regulations, transgender people’s use of bathrooms, immigration, short-term home rentals.

Among the items on the special session agenda: Property tax reform. A proposal is in the works that would create rollback elections when a city or county wants to raise property taxes above a certain amount. What are municipal leaders saying about this?

They’ve been fighting it. They say such requirements would make it harder for them to balance city and county budgets. The said that could keep them from being unable to afford basic services that their constituents expect them to provide. The flipside of that is state leaders are saying if city and county leaders are spending money wisely, they shouldn’t have problems balancing the books.

There’s also something called municipal annexation reform. What is it?

This was a bill that looked like it would pass during the regular session, but it died in the Senate during a filibuster. One of the proposals is expected to be if a city wants to annex a neighborhood that’s in an unincorporated area that they get approval from most of the homeowners in that area.

The governor says cities are over-regulating and that threatens the state’s economy. What do cities have to say about that?

Their big question is if it’s threatening the economy, why has the Texas economy been doing so well? City leaders point out that most of the state’s jobs, most of the state’s economy, is based in cities.

One theme we’re seeing is this division between city officials and state leaders over the role of government and different levels of government.

Experts say as politics nationally become more divisive, that trickles down to the state and city levels. Cities are becoming more and more left-leaning but you’re seeing statehouses become more and more right-leaning. When that happens during an environment where there’s a lot of partisan divide, the statehouses are increasingly getting more involved in issues they think the cities are going too far on.

And, as it's been reported over and over and over again, the special session is needed because lawmakers couldn’t pass a bill to keep a handful of state agencies open and operating. That got some of our listeners wondering if lawmakers could’ve spend their time at the Capitol a little more efficiently.